APM first Australian member of Valuable 500

Published on 08 Mar 2019

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  • APM becomes first Australian member of The Valuable 500, a global campaign to unlock the value of people with disability across the world
  • APM is amongst the first ten members to commit to tabling disability inclusion on their board agenda, along with Virgin Media, BraunAbility, Cinepolis, Unilever, Barclays, Accenture, Microsoft, Fujitsu and Danske Bank
  • Announcement comes as #valuable Founder Caroline Casey takes to the stage of Omniwomen on International Women’s Day

APM, Australia’s leading provider of disability employment services, has announced its commitment to disability inclusion in business by announcing its membership of The Valuable 500.

APM is one of the first ten global companies which is committing to place disability inclusion on their board agendas as part of The Valuable 500 – a global campaign to raise awareness of the value of the over 1 billion people with disability across the world.

The campaign recognises that when businesses take the lead and take action, society will follow leading to real change being made.

The Valuable 500 launched at the World Economic Forum’s Annual Summit in Davos in January and is calling on global business leaders to become accountable for disability inclusion in their businesses.

Group CEO Michael Anghie said APM was proud to become the first Australian business to sign up to The Valuable 500 Campaign. He commented,

“APM operates in ten countries and we support more than 350,000 people to improve their lives each year in a variety of programs, with a strong focus on helping drive better outcomes for people with disability.

“We are also Australia’s largest provider of Disability Employment Services and every single day we see the social, business and economic value of people with disability and the benefit of greater inclusion in our work places and communities.

“We are pleased to join The Valuable 500 Campaign to help improve the lives of people with disability and get disability firmly on the business agenda so more companies realise what great employees they’ve been missing out on. One in five Australians live with a disability, that’s more than four million people and we all have a role to drive greater workplace and community diversity.

“Everyone has a right to a job, respect and inclusion. People with disability are no different; this is about fairness and doing the right thing.”

Established in 1994, APM is a leading global mission-driven human services organisation with one simple purpose, to enable better lives. Through multiple businesses and services in 10 countries, APM supports more than 350,000 people each year to make positive changes and improve their lives.

Global support for Valuable 500

APM joins global brands Virgin Media, BraunAbility, Cinepolis, Unilever, Barclays, Accenture, Microsoft, Fujitsu, and Danske Bank as the first ten global businesses to sign up to the disability inclusion campaign.

These companies and leaders are taking a number of steps to support disability inclusion and equality throughout their businesses – reflecting a groundswell of corporate appetite to actively drive action on disability inclusion in business.

The campaign seeks to tackle the trend for businesses to claim they are diverse, but exclude disability from their definition of diversity.

The need for the Valuable 500 campaign comes as research by EY commissioned by #valuable has found disability is still woefully absent from the majority of board level discussions globally - with the majority (56%) of global senior executives rarely or never discussing disability on their leadership agendas.

Further research from Edelman’s 2019 Trust Barometer found that 62% of employees are looking to their CEO for leadership during challenging times, and that “in 2019, trusted brands will be those who not only talk about change, but actively participate in driving it forward. The time for fence-sitting by large corporates is long gone – businesses must take a clear stance on issues and lead from the front.”

Omniwomen UK Leadership Summit

Today’s announcement also comes as Caroline Casey speaks at The Omniwomen UK Leadership Summit, which will bring together 300 Omniwomen delegates to celebrate International Women’s Day and advocate for inclusion in every form.

Omniwomen is a day of workshops, discussions and talks from inspirational and diverse speakers, organised by global media, marketing and corporate communications company Omnicom. This year’s theme is ‘Supporting Diverse Paths to Leadership’ to celebrate and enable women from all backgrounds to fulfil their potential.

Caroline Casey, founder of #valuable commented:

“I am over the moon to be celebrating APM as the first Australian sign up to The Valuable 500 today. APM is a leader in its sector so we welcome their efforts to improve disability inclusion in global business with open arms.

“Diversity and inclusion are more than just a statistic. Being able to seize opportunities and live life to the fullest is essential to the billion people across the world who experience disability.

“I urge businesses to join The Valuable 500 movement and stop being ‘diversish’. It’s no longer good enough for companies to say ‘disability doesn’t fit with our brand’ or ‘it’s a good idea to explore next year’. Businesses cannot be truly inclusive if disability is continuingly ignored on leadership agendas.

“I’m proud to be speaking at this year’s Omniwomen UK + Allies Leadership Summit – to play my part in making inclusion everyone’s business.”

In the coming weeks, Caroline Casey will also take to the stage at SXSW in Austin, Texas and Advertising Week Europe in London to speak about The Valuable 500.

Both events will include a screening of #valuable’s DIVERSISH film, a satirical look at businesses that call themselves diverse, but overlook, ignore or postpone anything to do with disability.

The film calls for business leaders to stop being diverse-ish and commit to action on disability inclusion.

Today, over one billion people across the world live with some form of disability - 15% of the global population, or 1 in 7 people - but their value is routinely ignored by business, equivalent to disregarding a potential market the size of US, Brazil, Indonesia and Pakistan combined.

The current global employment rate for disabled people is half that of non-disabled people, a gap that has widened since 2010. According to the World Health Organisation, up to half of businesses in OECD countries choose to pay fines rather than meet quotas on disability.

Along with their friends, families and communities, the one billion disabled people worldwide also hold a disposable annual income of $8 trillion a year, equating to an opportunity that business cannot afford to ignore. Of those one billion, 80% of disabilities are acquired later life, and our ageing global population means the prevalence of disability is on the rise.

#valuable, the organisation behind the launch of The Valuable 500, is supported by a number of high profile businesses and business leaders, including strategic partners Omnicom and Virgin Media, and leaders including Sir Richard Branson, Paul Polman, Janet Riccio and EY Chairman & CEO Mark Weinberger.

Founder of #valuable Caroline Casey launched the Valuable 500 at DAVOS in January, with the support of global business leaders, including former CEO of Unilever Paul Polman, Bloomberg Chairman Peter T Grauer and Procter & Gamble Group President, North America, Caroline Tastad.

This was the first time the World Economic Forum has ever included disability on the main stage at DAVOS.

#valuable is a catalyst for an inclusion revolution that exists to position disability equally on the global business leadership agenda. It is spearheaded by award-winning activist, social entrepreneur and Binc founder Caroline Casey, who is registered blind.

In 2017, Caroline launched #valuable at One Young World, the global summit for young leaders, providing a platform to activate a new generation of future leaders who care passionately about disability inclusion and aren’t afraid to be vocal about it.

Caroline set off on a boundary-pushing, month-long 1,000-kilometre horse adventure through Colombia to the opening ceremony of One Young World to engage next generation leaders with the power to make change.

Caroline took to the One Young World stage once more in 2018, speaking about the Inclusion Revolution.

To apply to be a Valuable 500 business, please visit thevaluable500.com.

#valuable – it’s everyone’s business.

Media contacts

For interviews and further information, please contact:

Valuable 500

Eloise Keightley, Seven Hills
Email: eloise.keightley@wearesevenhills.com

Marianne Waite
Email: marianne@thevaluable500.com

APM

Adrian Bradley
APM General Manager Corporate Affairs
Email: adrian.bradley@apm.net.au

Fiona Kalaf
APM Group General Manager Markets and Innovation
Email: fiona.kalaf@apm.net.au

Applying for membership of The Valuable 500

To apply to be a Valuable 500 business, please visit thevaluable500.com.

Membership of The Valuable 500 includes:

  • Unlimited access to our executive disability performance resource hub
  • Membership to a community of like-minded business peer leaders, committed to raising their game on disability
  • The platform and opportunity to raise your profile as an early adopter helping to shape this vital emerging economic and societal agenda.

By becoming a member of The Valuable 500, you agree to:

  • Commit – Table disability on your board agenda from 2019
  • Act – Make one firm commitment to action in 2019
  • Amplify – Share your commitment to The Valuable 500 internally and externally

About APM

APM (Advanced Personnel Management, apm.net.au, apm-nz.co.nz) is an Australian-owned global leader in human services, delivering employment, injury management/vocational rehabilitation, allied health intervention, community care (aged care and disability care) and assessment services.

APM delivers these services to public sector employers, private sector employers, participants and other clients from 670-plus locations across Australia, New Zealand, the UK, Spain, Germany, Switzerland, Canada, the USA, Singapore and South Korea. APM currently assists more than 350,000 people per annum.

About BraunAbility

BraunAbility is the world's leading manufacturer of mobility transportation solutions, including wheelchair accessible vehicles, wheelchair lifts and seating, storage and securement products.

Founded nearly 50 years ago by Ralph Braun, the company has grown into the most well-known and trusted name in the mobility industry, bringing independence to millions of individuals across the world. BraunAbility has over 1200 employees worldwide and is a wholly owned subsidiary to Patricia Industries, a division of Investor AB Group.

About #valuable

Launched by Binc, #valuable is a campaign working to ensure businesses globally recognise the value of the one billion people around the world living with a disability.

We believe that building a global society that recognises the value of the 1.3 billion people living with a disability starts with business. We’re on a mission to make sure businesses across the world recognise the value of the one billion people living with a disability.

Binc was founded by social entrepreneur and activist Caroline Casey in 2015, with a mission to ignite a historic global movement for a new age of business inclusion.

Binc is capitalising on Caroline Casey’s 18-year track record of success engaging over 450 organisations and working with 500,000 business leaders.

Binc fundamentally believes that inclusive business creates inclusive societies and is initiating a new approach to business that genuinely includes the 1 billion people living in the world with a disability.

Binc is the founding team behind valuable, an ambitious global campaign to put inclusivity on top of the business agenda around the world in 2019.

Binc is using a tried and tested formula that has worked in the past for gender, race and LGBT to leverage the exponential rise of The Diversity and Inclusion Agenda.

Definition of disability

#valuable uses the definition provided by the UN Convention on Rights of Persons with disabilities, which defines a person living with a disability as ‘those who have long-term physical, mental, intellectual or sensory impairments which in interaction with various barriers may hinder their full and effective participation in society on an equal basis with others.’

1 who.int/teams/noncommunicable-diseases/sensory-functions-disability-and-rehabilitation/world-report-on-disability
2 WHO
3 who.int/teams/noncommunicable-diseases/sensory-functions-disability-and-rehabilitation/world-report-on-disability
4 Return on Disability, 2016
5 Scope and Landman, Enabling Work

Disability and the Sustainable Development Goals

The need to advance disability inclusion around the globe is essential to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.

Disability or ‘persons with disabilities’ are specifically referenced 11 times in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, with a further six references to ‘persons in vulnerable situations’.

Principally with reference to: promoting inclusive economic growth that allows disabled people to fully access the job market and guaranteeing equal and accessible education through the creation of inclusive environments.